easy compiles consist of racing to the next blocking I/O. difficult compiles sit there eating CPU. short timeslice would cause it to get I/O started sooner, but hurts performance for difficult compiles
@StackedCrooked would a basic bandwidth attack do it? If my vps sat there and reloaded the main page as fast as it could in 1024 overlapped async http clients, could I DOS it?
it isn't hard to put basic rate limits in the firewall
not sure what exactly an external project is. What you are supposed to do is find_package(LLVM REQUIRED) and be done with it, unless someone screwed up the paths and you have to hunt down the files and change them
Anybody have a link to a good rendering engine? I'm getting tired of rewriting the same GUI boilerplate so I can push entities onto the screen for data visualization.
Yeah, Qt/Swing/Tkinter are pretty low level. I just need to write objects that extend Entity (or w/e), have an update() and render() method, and where I can push some data into them. Other than that, I just need keyboard input to manipulate the view.
Blegh, opengl doesn't have a scene-graph/entities. Hopefully Ogre3D is a slightly higher level library. If not, I'll roll my own but it won't be pretty.
@doug65536, it depends on whether you are the leader of the project (so are able to prevent future typedefs). Otherwise you would be killing yourself LOL
NooOOOooOO. Anything that involves labelling arbitrary data types is grimy. using tuples to store data is just as bad. Just make classes that are easy to instantiate if you're going to pass the same formatted data around often enough that it needs to be associated. Nothing wrong with 2DPoint(4, 5)
/me hates typedefs/other hacks that pretend to be OOP without the benefits of OOP
@mr5 using modulo, you can wrap ascending values back to zero. Then it's simply a matter of appending the pivot and appending the next values for sequence.length() / 2. After doing that, finish by inserting the remaining values. Depending on your needs, choose how to round cases where the sequence is an odd length
The other option, which is less efficient, is to simply rotate the sequence until the pivot is centered. The most efficient solution is to count up from pivot - length / 2 to pivot, then count up from pivot + 1 to pivot + length / 2 (only because there is no shuffling the data around with inserts). IMO, don't worry too much about efficiency unless you are sorting sequences 100,000+, especially in C++
I am having some difficulty compiling a C++ program that I've written.
This program is very simple and, to the best of my knowledge, conforms to all the rules set forth in the C++ Standard. I've read over the entirety of ISO/IEC 14882:2003 twice to be sure.
The program is as follows:
Here i...
yes right dequeue e.g. read only consumer observing head, and produces pushes in tail and if it goes beyond a limit it removes the one in head and then pushes in tail
shared memory is the moral equivalent of mmap of an imaginary file that doesn't actually exist. in windows, an anonymous mapping represents mapping part of the page file
boost has shared memory stuff, if you want maximum portability